The rate also needs to be defined in terms of time: for example, 6 m per second or 6 m per day. Without that information the "rate" makes no sense and the question is nonsensical.
(6 meters/second) x (4 minutes) x (60 second/minute) = 1,440 meters
they are both traveling at te same rate.
If you move at a rate of 29 mm per year, in 10,000 years, you would travel a distance of 290,000 mm. To convert this into meters, you divide by 1,000, resulting in 290 meters. Therefore, at that rate, you would cover 290 meters over the span of 10,000 years.
distance = rate * time 1000 meters = 331 meters/second * x seconds x = 1000 / 331 So about 3 seconds.
1 meter/second/second in the same direction of travel
(6 meters/second) x (4 minutes) x (60 second/minute) = 1,440 meters
To calculate the distance traveled in 3 minutes running at a rate of 6 meters per second, first convert 3 minutes to seconds (3 minutes = 180 seconds). Then, multiply the speed (6 meters per second) by the time (180 seconds) to find the total distance. Therefore, the distance traveled would be 6 meters/second x 180 seconds = 1080 meters.
186,282 miles (299,792,458 meters) per second
Although it's pretty much impossible to travel at 6 miles per second, if you were doing so, you would travel a total of 6 x 1609.344 x 180 = 579363.84 metres.
Running increases your heart rate. When you finish the 100 meters sprint in say fourteen seconds, the heart rate may go up to 180 beats per minute.
60.912 meters in that time
Depents on what depth your at and your personal breathe rate, typical 30-60 Mins at 25 meters,
speed 300.000 meters peer second with frecuency of 1.000.000+ GHz(or more)
they are both traveling at te same rate.
(450,000 meters) x (1 second/120 meters) = 3,750 seconds( 1hour 2minutes 30seconds )
Your average speed at that rate of travel was 3.9 mph.
A "rate of 1 kg meter" doesn't make any sense.